September 16, 2010

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Ertai’s Trickery: The Mad Machinist’s Mash-Up (Part 1 of 6)

by Dredd77

Today we’re excited to introduce a new occasional series to the website: Ertai’s Trickery! Whereas the Meddling series follows very specific rules with an eye to refining an existing deck within its own framework, Ertai’s Trickery throws such stodgy methodolgy to the wind. No, what you’ll find here is the offbeat, the oddball and the extraordinary, and we’ll be beginning today with the start of a mash-up deck.

The genesis for this feature came from one of our readers, Jars, who had this to say:

One suggestion that you might want to try in the near future: since you already have all these Wizards-made decks (Intro Packs, Duel Decks, etc), what say you to doing a mash-up of sorts? I mean, use cards from another precon to tweak and improve this deck. For example, use the “Assemble the Doomsday Machine” Archenemy deck or “Metallic Dreams” Planechase deck to give the Tezzeret deck a boost. I know that you have specified your procedure of editing decklists (e.g., no adding rares) but this might be a good thing to try.

The more we thought about it, the more fun the idea sounded. But then we thought, “hey, why limit ourselves to just two? Since we have all three of those solidly Artifact-based decks in our library, let’s see if we can’t come up with something truly wicked. So Planechase’s Metallic Dreams, Archenemy’s Assemble the Doomsday Machine, and Duel Decks: Elspeth vs Tezzeret’s Tezzeret deck came down off the shelf and were dumped into one large pile.

That said, Ertai’s Lament is a site not only dedicated to exploring and reviewing Magic’s preconstructed products, but we also like to keep a firm focus on explaining the fundamentals of the game. With precons the gateway to Magic for so many, there’s a great synergy between teaching the principles of the game and just having fun with it! Ertai’s Trickery will be no different- we won’t just cut cards out or throw cards in, we’ll be telling you why we made the decisions we did as we refine the deck with each episode.

We won’t always make the same choices you’d make, and we reserve the right to be flat-out wrong on occasion, but we’d especially welcome feedback from Trickery readers to let us know what they think of the deck, what choices they’d make and how they’d do things differently (or similarly!).

Since this is a time for Artifacts to shine, we’ll be calling this the Mad Machinist’s Mash-Up, and it will be unfolding over several columns. The climax will be a face-off against the vexing Elspeth, crusher of so many would-be Artificer’s ambitions (if the comments many of you have left here are any guide to go by!).

And so, to get right into it, today we’ll be setting the stage with our first- and by far the easiest- round of cuts.

Starting with the Land, everything can be pitched except for the Vault of Whispers and two Seats of the Synod. These ‘Artifact Lands’ have no drawback over normal Lands with regards to playing, and can be a huge help with powering out our trinkets more cheaply!

Next, we’ll move onto the Creatures. The Sludge Strider is right out, as it requires to be cast, and it can take the gaggle of off-colour Myr with it (Iron, Gold and Copper). And as splendid a battlefield commander as Bosh, Iron Golem might make, he needs to activate his special ability. Gonzo.

Part of Metallic Dreams’ effectiveness came in its use of the Sunburst mechanic. Capable of generating all five colours of mana, you very frequently could cast this for maximum effect. Mad Machinist will have no such recourse, so the Suntouched Myr and two Etched Oracles become the next cards headed for the bread lines.

Lastly, looking at the non-Creature spells availabile to us and applying the same logic, we’ll drop the Door to Nothingness and twin Pentad Prisms from contention.

Those that have survived the axe will be in for some stiff competition from the other two decks we’re using, but can at least take a breather until the next columns’s round of cuts. Our Metallic Dreams keepers are (sorted by converted mana cost):

No precious Artifact Lands here, I’m afraid- all we’re given outside of the basics is a pair of Terramorphic Expanses. Ordinarily the solid budget choice for mana fixing, we’ll be taking a pass here for a couple of reasons. First, they’re simply too slow, which is the price you pay for Common mana fixing in the Land slot. Secondly, we have plenty of fixing options available to us in the Artifacts we have to chose from. And finally, with so much of our deck being castable with any mana, Mad Machinist will have less vulnerability to being short on mana that most other decks.

Alright, so that last one is perfectly castable, but readers of past columns know of my perfectly reasonable hatred of the Strongbox, and castable or not I’m not subjecting myself to that card in any remotely voluntary basis.

With the guillotine now off to be oiled, we’re left with the following candidates for Mad Machinist:

Sifting through the lands, another Seat of the Synod reveals itself, and there is much rejoicing! That brings our total up to a respectable three. From there we have a Stalking Stones, Darksteel Citadel, and Mishra’s Factory, all possible contenders.

And there we have it- our first round of cuts! These, of course, were all the easy ones, things are going to start heating up in the next round. Who will make it, and who will be issued their walking papers? Find out in two days’ time!

I love this new series!
I would take out the agony warp in doomsday and replace it with a dimir signet. I dont really like Agony Warp so much, and Dimir SIgnet is useful for cards like Sundering Titan
Ill be cure to try out the tezzeret one!

Wow… I didn’t think I’d find something I loved as much as the meddling series, but this is really nice. The tournament style cutting is an exciting, and new way to look at the game for me. I’m very interested to see how this is going to turn out, and what comes out on top. This could get especially nasty.

Ok, now this is an interesting series, as I have all of those decks. Never thought really of a mash-up between them, specialy since Tezzeret is a monocolored deck. I like it, let’s see where this goes.